Showing posts with label Riley Sager. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Riley Sager. Show all posts

Saturday, January 2, 2021

Book of the Month: July 2018


Offered Books:
The Last Time I Lied by Riley Sager
Summer Wives by Beatriz Williams
Spinning Silver by Naomi Novik
Ghosted by Rosie Walsh
Gone Girl by Gillian Flynn

Selected:
The Last Time I Lied by Riley Sager

Others Purchased:
Spinning Silver by Naomi Novik


Having been a big fan of Riley Sager's previous novel, Final Girls, selecting The Last Time I Lied was a no-brainer for me.  Even if it didn't live up to the previous novel (spoilers: it did not), he had more than earned my interest in his follow-up.  So, without hesitation, I selected this book.

I wouldn't say I was disappointed - I still enjoyed the book enough to get his next two novels, Lock Every Door and Home Before Dark - but it was a slight let-down after the high of the previous novel.

The Last Time I Lied follows Emma Davis, an artist experiencing her first big opening when offered a job teaching art at Camp Nightingale - the same camp where Emma experienced a traumatic event that greatly influences her art.  Taking the job to both confront her demons and to find out what happened to her three friends all those years ago, Emma finds herself learning about the dark history of the camp while also finding various clues left behind by the ringleader of her friend group, Vivian.

Sager does a great job with the premise, but falls into a bit of a repetitive pattern through the greater part of the book: Emma discovers something, confronts the person whose past she just learned about, then has said past explained away as mundane.  One would expect some of these explanations to be gaslighting, but they aren't - and Emma repeats herself as she discovers yet another fact/detail.  It doesn't ruin the experience, but I kept wondering why Emma - who is by no means a dumb character - continually made the same mistake over and over again.

Despite this, the story does move at a brisk pace, and the mystery still casts a shadow over everything Emma does - a silver lining to the repetitiveness is how it makes Emma come across as much more determined a character.  Her determinedness to solve the riddle of her past makes the various confrontations at least feel plausible.

Another weaker aspect of this novel was the relationships between the characters.  The flashback scenes between Emma, Vivian, Natalie, and Allison are quite economical in how they show the burgeoning friendships between the girls, but the present day scenes don't work quite as well - if not for a very late plot twist, one would wonder why anyone would spend time with Emma.  Even worse, the campers in her care are much more invested in Emma than one would expect, given how little time is spent on her interactions with them.  Nothing rings entirely false, but the character interactions to feel contrived at times.

Sager does do a good job with the setting - Camp Nightingale is mysterious and spooky enough (at least through Emma's perspective) to keep the reader's interest, without stretching believability as to whether or not anyone would attend said camp.

Despite my critiques - this review might be another that reads more negative than I actually felt about the book - this is a solid novel.  The opening - told from Emma's perspective as she paints on of her pieces - is beautiful:  it explains so much about the character while hinting about her past without giving too much away.  And the solution to the main mystery is satisfying - I did not expect the resolution, but it didn't feel like a cheap surprise that a lesser writer might have gone with.

While it doesn't reach the highs of Final Girls, this is still a definite recommend.

3.5 out of 5


Spinning Silver was a book I initially overlooked when it was first offered.  It wasn't until I started seeing it on various 'Best of 2018' lists - and the lucky happenstance of a free selection with Book of the Month - that I decided to give in to my curiosity and read the novel.  I am very glad I did.

Set in a fantasy world that feels adjacent to ours, the novel follows multiple characters, but primarily focuses on Miryem - the daughter of moneylenders who finds her family on the cusp of poverty.  Doing what her father could not, she starts collecting on the debts owed to her - developing a reputation for being able to turn silver into gold.  She boasts about this ability near the forest of the Staryk - elf-like creatures - and their leader forces her to make good on her supposed ability.

If this sounds similar to Rumpelstiltskin, trust that Novik only loosely uses that story, and before long the novel has passed the basic plot of that story and expanded into a tale that affects kingdoms both human and magic.  Novik expertly creates this world and the characters inhabiting them without getting so lost in the details that reading becomes a chore.

As the story widens, Novik also starts focusing on various characters affected by Miryem's journey - shifting Miryem's perspective to theirs.  Each of these characters is defined quickly, and Novik uses them to deepen the world she has created.  Whether focusing on the poor daughter of an abusive drunk or the well-off daughter of a minor lord, Novik brings nuance to their telling of the story.

The only quibble I would have with this method is that it feels like a few of characters are more of a plot device to explain parts of the novel that would otherwise make no sense - but it is a small one given the amount of intrigue going on in the story.

For fans of fantasy, I'd say this is a must-read.

4 out of 5

Author Links:

Thursday, July 16, 2020

Book of the Month: July 2017


Offered Books:
American Fire by Monica Hesse
Goodbye, Vitamin by Rachel Khong
The Windfall by Diksha Basu
The Child by Fiona Barton
Final Girls by Riley Sager

Selected:
Goodbye, Vitamin by Rachel Khong

Others Purchased:
Final Girls by Riley Sager


This novel has the distinction of being my first ever selection from Book of the Month.  Granted, I was leaning towards Final Girls until I learned my sister had purchased it, but whatever the circumstances of the selection, this novel still has pride of place.  I also have not re-read it since the month I got it, so this is a review from memory.  Apologies if some details are wrong.

The novel follows Ruth and her family over a year as her father starts to lose his mental facilities (it is hinted that it is Alzheimer's, but I don't recall it being outright stated).  Ruth, fresh off a breakup, moves home to help take care of her father - who is resistant to the help.

The novel is very similar to Chemistry in its structure - it is not told linearly and skips around - which could be a bit of a wall for some readers.  While more happens in this compared to that other book, it is still more of an emotional journey than anything else.  There is also humor in this, but it doesn't feel natural to the story, more as an attempt to lighten the mood in between the heavier scenes.

Which is not to say the novel is bad - it's actually quite good for those that aren't thwarted by the narrative structure.  But it wouldn't be a 'fun' read.  Nevertheless, I'd still recommend it as a solid book.

3.5 out of 5


The second novel from this month follows Quincy, one of three 'Final Girls' - women who have survived a massacre - that saw all of her friends killed.  While there was an attempt to get the three all together for a media event, Quincy cancels her attendance and attempts to move on from the tragedy.  While she kept some contact with one of the other girls, she has spent the last ten years working to put the tragedy behind her.

The novel starts at that ten year mark, but does let us know what transpired on the night Quincy gained her infamy through flashbacks scattered throughout the book.  But a major event from that night is blocked from Quincy, which threatens to come out as she finally meets and interacts with the third final girl - Sam - when she appears on Quincy's doorstep.

The novel takes many twists and turns as Quincy deals with Sam and her incomplete memory, and keeps the readers on their toes throughout.  None of the twists feel forced, and the conclusion of the book works wonderfully with the hints dropped earlier in the book.  The characters are great - in addition to Quincy and Sam, we meet the cop who saved Quincy and Quincy's fiance - and the novel never feels slow, even in the quieter moments.  Despite being one of the first books I ever received from Book of the Month, I still consider it one of my favorites.

A definite recommend for anyone - even those who don't love thrillers.

4.5 out of 5

Author Links: